The 'good guys' who can do no
wrong
Why are we surprised at their racism, their brutality, their sheer
callousness towards Arabs? Those American soldiers in Saddam's old prison
at Abu Ghraib, those young British squaddies in Basra came - as soldiers
often come - from towns and cities where race hatred has a home: Tennessee
and Lancashire. Click Here for Full
Story
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The 'good guys' who can do no
wrong
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article6125.htm
Why are we
surprised at their racism, their brutality, their sheer callousness
towards Arabs? Those American soldiers in Saddam's old prison at Abu
Ghraib, those young British squaddies in Basra came -- as soldiers often
come -- from towns and cities where race hatred has a home: Tennessee and
Lancashire.
How many of "our" lads are ex--jailbirds themselves? How many
support the British National Party? Muslims, Arabs, "cloth
heads", "rag heads", "terrorists",
"evil". You can see how the semantics break down.
Add to that the poisonous, racial dribble of a hundred Hollywood movies
that depict Arabs as dirty, lecherous, untrustworthy and violent people --
and soldiers are addicted to movies -- and it's not difficult to see how
some British scumbag will urinate into the face of a hooded man, how some
American sadist will stand a hooded Iraqi on a box with wires tied to his
hands.
The sexual sadism -- the bobby--sox girl soldier who points at a man's
genitals, the mock orgy in Abu Ghraib prison, the British rifle in the
prisoner's mouth -- might be a crazed attempt to balance all those lies
about the Arab world, about the desert warrior's potency, the harem,
polygamy.
Even today, we still show the revolting Ashanti on our television
stations, a feature film about the kidnapping of the wife of an English
doctor by Arab slave--traders, which depicts Arabs as almost exclusively
child--molesters, rapists, murderers, liars and thieves. It stars --
heaven spare us -- Michael Caine, Omar Sharif and Peter Ustinov and was
made partly in Israel.
Indeed, we now depict Arabs in our films as the Nazis once depicted Jews.
But Arabs are fair game. Potential terrorists to a man -- and a woman --
they must be softened up, "prepared", humiliated, beaten,
tortured. The Israelis use torture in the Russian Compound in Jerusalem.
Now we torture in Saddam's old jail outside Baghdad and -- for this is
where British soldiers beat a young Iraqi to death last summer -- in the
former office of Saddam's most murderous chemical warfare fascist, the
awful "Chemical" Ali.
And the officers? Didn't the British lieutenants and captains and majors
in the Queen's Lancashire Regiment know that their lads were kicking to
death a young Iraqi hotel worker last summer?
That man's fate -- and the documentary evidence proving that he was
murdered -- was first revealed by The Independent on Sunday in January.
Didn't the CIA boys at Abu Ghraib know that Ivan "Chip"
Frederick and Lynddie England, two of the American soldiers in the
photographs published last week, were obscenely humiliating their
prisoners?
Of course they did. The last time I saw Brigadier General Janis Karpinski,
commander of the 800th Military Police Brigade in Iraq, she told me she
had visited Camp X--Ray in Guantanamo and found nothing wrong with it. I
should have guessed then that something had gone terribly wrong in Iraq.
I remember how in Basra, on the eve of a visit by Tony Blair, I visited
the British Army's press office in the city to ask about the death of
26--year--old Baha Mousa. The dead man's family had given me British
documents proving that he had been beaten to death in custody, that the
British Army had itself tried to pay off the family if they would give up
any legal claim against the soldiers who so cruelly killed their son.
I was met with yawns and a total inability to furnish information about
the event. I was told to call the Ministry of Defence in London. The
officer I spoke to appeared weary, even impatient about my inquiry. There
was not a single word of compassion for the dead man.
Back in September last year, General Karpinski was with a small group of
journalists in Abu Ghraib -- the same ghastly prison in which thousands
were put to death by Saddam, the same jail in which Frederick and England
and their American buddies were standing their hooded Iraqi prisoner on a
box with supposed electrodes on his hands -- and General Karpinski took
some delight in escorting us to the old Saddam execution chamber.
She led the way into the concrete room with its raised dais and gallows,
and -- in front of us all -- triumphantly pulled the gallows lever so that
the trap door clanged down. She urged us to read the last messages
scrawled on the walls of the neighbouring death row by Iraqis awaiting
Saddam's vengeance. But there was something wrong about her prison tour.
There was no clear judicial process for the prisoners and there was no
mention -- until I brought it up -- of the mortar attack on the
American--held jail which killed six of the inmates in their tents in
August, when General Karpinski was already in command of Iraq's 8,000
prisoners. They had been given "counselling", she told us.
"They seemed to think we had been using them as some kind of
sand--bag." Abu Ghraib was then being attacked by insurgents four out
of every seven nights. Now it is attacked twice every night.
Oddly, she claimed in answer to a question of mine that there were
"six prisoners claiming to be American and two claiming to be from
the UK". But when General Ricardo Sanchez, the senior Iraqi officer
in Iraq, later denied this, no one asked how the confusion had arisen. Was
General Karpinski making it up? Or was General Sanchez not telling us the
truth? Prisoners' names were often confused, Arabic script was mis--transliterated,
men went "missing" from the files. It spoke of a whole culture
in which Iraqis -- especially Iraqi prisoners -- were somehow not worthy
of the same rights as us Westerners; which is why, I suppose, the
occupying powers in Iraq always give us the statistics of Westerners'
deaths but care not the slightest to discover the statistics of the deaths
of Iraqis, the very people they are mandated to protect and care for.
A few weeks ago, I was chatting to a young American soldier off Saadoun
Street in the centre of Baghdad. He was giving sweets to street kids and
mimicking the Arabic for "thank you": sukran. Did he know
Arabic, I innocently asked. He grinned at me. "I know how to shout at
them," he said. And there you have it.
We are all victims of our high--flown morality. "They" -- the
Arabs, Muslims, "cloth heads", "rag heads",
"terrorists" -- are of a lesser breed, of lower moral standards.
They are people to be shouted at. They have to be "liberated"
and given "democracy". But we little band of brothers, we dress
ourselves up in the uniforms of righteousness. We are marines or military
police or a Queen's regiment and we are on the side of good.
"They" are on the side of "evil". So we can do no
wrong.
Or so it appeared until those shameful pictures last week tore apart the
whole bandwagon and proved that race hatred and prejudice is an old
historical inheritance of ours. We used to call Saddam the Hitler of Iraq.
But wasn't Hitler one of "us", a Westerner, a citizen of
"our" culture? If he could kill six million Jews, which he did,
why should we be surprised that "we" can treat Iraqis like
animals? Last week came the photographs to prove we can.
Copyright: The Independent
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